Its a Softwood
I am going with softwood.
Tulipwood (Liriodendron Tulipifera) is a North American Hardwood, also known as Tulip Poplar although not related to Poplar. Density 490kg/m3
Pulp is neither hardwood nor softwood. Hardwood and softwood are classification of wood types. Both hardwood and softwood can be pulped. There are various types of hardwood pulps and softwood pulps.
There are both softwood plywoods (made from either Southern yellow pine or Douglas fir) and hardwood plywoods. Hardwood plywood comes in four types: poplar plywood, which is poplar all the way through; MDF core, which has veneers of hardwood glued to the faces of MDF; veneer core, which is poplar plywood with veneers of higher-cost hardwoods glued to the faces; and marine hardwood, which is high-strength hardwood all the way through. The last one is very expensive, and hard to find.
To my knowledge, any deciduous tree ( A tree that loses it's leaves in the winter) is considered a hardwood. Even the Tulip Poplar tree that is most often mistaken for a softwood, is a hardwood tree.
Ash, oak, poplar, mahogany, maple and many others.
Balsa is the lightest Hardwood But it is soft
Polpar is a type of Hardwood. It is used for manufacturing things such as chopsticks, matchsticks, Paper, Unexspensive hardwood timber, Cheap plywood and it can be used for the bases of guitars and drums. Hope this helps.
it varies from species to species. For instance, poplar reaches market size in about ten years and it's a hardwood. Sequoia takes decades to get big, and it's a softwood.
Two of the quickest-growing trees are poplar and radiata pine, which both reach market size in about 10 years. Poplar is a hardwood (broadleaf) tree, radiata pine is a softwood (needle-leaf) tree. One of the slowest-growing trees is California redwood, which takes about 80 years to reach market size; it's a softwood.
Estern Tiger Swallowtails feed on the leaves of a a variety of hardwood trees, including birch, tulip poplar, wild cherry, ash, and others.